Zurich Herald, 1934-02-22, Page 7How Acid Stomach
Makes Itself
Known to You
g.
HERE ARE THE SIGNS;
Nervousness Frequent Headaches
Neuralgia heeling of Weakness
Indigestion Sleeplessness
Loss of Appetite Mouth Acidity
Nausea Sour Stomach
Auto -intoxication
WHAT 70 DO FOR IT:
SAKE --2 teaspoonfuls of
Phillips' Milk of Mag.
nesia in a glass of water
every morning when you
pet up. Take another
teaspoonful 30 minutes
after eating. And another
before you go to bed.
OR -Take the new
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia
Tablets — oqe tablet for
each teaspoonful as di -
reefed above.
If you have Acid Stomach, don't
worry about it. Follow the simple
directions given above, This small
dosage of Phillips' Milk of Magnesia
nets al once to neutralize the acids
that cause headache, stomach pains
and other distress. Try it. You'll
feel like a new person.
But: --be careful you get REAL
milk of magnesia when you 'buy
genuine PHILLIPS' Milk of Mag-
nesia. See that the name "PHIL-
LIPS' is on the label.
ALSO IN TABLET FORM
Each tiny tablet is the
equivalent of a teaspoonful
of Genuine Phillips' Milk
of Magnesia.
MADE 1N CANADA
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia
Noted Women Choose
Gowns Chez Molyneux
Misinguette, 60 -year-old balerina,
Who is dancing at the Casino de Paris,
has been collecting some pretty fine
clothes from the various couturiers,
among them a frock from Mclyneu:e,
in black "Panne sauvage" velvet. It
is an evening gown which she uses
for her personal entertaining and has
droppedeshoulders, a very high decol-
tete and black velvet flowers to trim
bhe sleeves.
The Princess Nicholas of Rumania
also has a black evening dress from
Molyneux, close -fitting and made of
tulle with a cape of the same, relieved
by touches of pink and pale blue moire
at the waist.
Black seems to be the thing, no
matter how niuch talk you hear about
'colors and the trend toward dark
baown instead of black. The Countess
'de Reyilla-Can;iarge has gone in for
black as an afternoon suit from Maly-
meux. The dress is of black woolwith
lacings of black moire on the side o£
'the bodice, and a black moire belt. The
!jacket is of black wool Iined with
lblaek moire and trimmed with black
Persian lamb.
Frost
2 know not why the frost should make
:Such graceful motifs on the pane
Of ferns and frond and growing grain;
know not why a tin; flake
'Upon my pillow when I wake,
hat may but or a breath remain,
Should to itself a star -shape take;
tl'Tor why a storm of driving sleet '
'Should make a withered weeds a fair
And crystal wood for elfin feet,
1411 gleaming in the morning air--
1Unless it be that God would meet
iThe eye with beauty everywhere.
Tessie Findlay Brown, in "The
Canadian Bookman."
A young man proved himself very
wise the other day when a certain.
'widow asked him how old he thought
she was, He answered: "I am .just
doubtful about malting you tern years
younger on account of yours looks, or
to make you ten years older, on ac-
count of your intelligence."
"So that is the dowager duchess?"
"The same."
"Who is her modiste?"
"I think she patronlzes an uphol-
sterer."
The old-fashioned woman who used
to get an occasional case of house-
maid's knee now has a daughter who
never gets anything more painful than
can -opener's wrist.
A woman who did not understand
the Language of business went into
the Bank of England and asked to
consult some one about her war loan
holding. The clerk to whom she talk-
ed happened to be a rather grave
person. He inquired:
Young Banker—Is it a case of con-
version or redemption, Madam?
The Womau (faltering) --Conver-
sion? Redemption? Er—pardon me, Is
this the Bank of England or the
Church of England?
Parade of Briefs.
Whenever a woman begins to quote
a man to others, she at least wants
him to be hers. The same money that
talks so loud walks out on you on its
tiptoes. Everybody has big ideas,
but only the man who masters the
details can translate a big idea into a
reality, If a married man learns to
love another woman it is usually be-
cause his wife made the lessons easy.
Today people are learning to do with-
out many things their parents never
dreamed of having. The father can't
understand why a daughter need to
go to a business college to learn the
touch system. In New York the law
doesn't allow a man to drink standing
up, and afterwards he isn't able to
do so. Man can make a house, but it
takes a woman, a baby and a puppy
to melte a home. If you are useful,
you don't have to be ornamental. A
woman worries and gets .wrinkles,
then she worries about the wrinkles.
A woman will worry. A compromise
is anagreement whereby both parties
get what neither of them wanted.
Girl—Is the ring Tack gave you set
with precious stones?
Her Chum—Yes, precious few.
Some men are such poor managers
they don't know how to run anything
except the country.
Junior—Grandma, if I was invited
out to diuner somewhere, should I
eat my pie with a fork?
Grandma—Certainly, dear.
Junior—Haven't you got a piece of
pie I could practice on, grandma?
The meanest man in the world is
the one who won't propose to a girl
after she has made up her mind to
refuse him.
Excellent advice from a popular
song: Take good care of yourself.
Take care of your health, take care
AFTER BABY CAME
Mother Put On Weight
TELLS HOW SHE GOT
BACK TO NORMAL
"Before having my baby," writes a
young mother, "I weighed 140 lbs,
'Afterwards—to my great dismay
-1
weighed 175 lbs., and gradually in-
creased to 193 lbs. Then I read of
Kruschen Salts (six weeks ago), and I
'decided to try them, at the same time
rdispensing with sugar, potatoes and
white bread.
"To my great joy, when I weighed
last Wednesday, it went 169y2 lbs. 1
'feel so jubilant in the thought that if 1.
keep on with. this, I shall regain my
normal weight, and once again be able
ka go in for the sports and pastimes
I had to discard owing to being sensi-
tive about my fatness. I feel I have
a lot of pleasure and happiness in
store."—(Mrs.) L. B.
There are six'vital mineral salts in
Kruschen. These salts combat the.
cause of fat by assisting the internal
organs to perforin their functions pro-
per]y—to throw off each day those
waste products and poisons which, if
allowed to accumulate, will be con-
verted by the body', chemistry into
fatty tissue.
Kruscben Salts do not reduce you
overnight — like so many products
claim to tic, But taken regularly over
a period of time --with a modified diet
and gentle exercise, half a teaspoouful
in a glass of hot water every morning
before breakfast will take away un-
healthy flesh and restore your figure
to its normal weight.
,Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all
Drug Stores at 46c. and 75c. per bottle
A FREE TRIAL. OFFER OF KRUSCHEN •
Try Kruschen now Oa our expense. We haveconvinced that E ruschen does everything we
distributed s great many special ,"GIANT" delta it to do, the regular bottle is still as
packages which make It easy for you to prove good as nest. Take it back, Your druggist le
ear claims for yourself, Ask your druggist authorized to return your 75c. Immediately
for the new i'GIANT'i 75e. package. This and withotttquestion,You havetrledICtnschea
consists of our regular ?5c. bottle together free at our expense. What could be fairer?
with a separate trial bottle—sufficient for Manufactured by E. GRTFPITI1S TIUGT%ES
about one week, Open the trial bottle first, Ltd. Manchester, England. (l5atabilabee
out it to the teat, and then,- if not entirely 17$65.
Save Poker Hands
to gt Better
Cigarette Papers
FREE
Nverybody agrees that "Vogue" and
"Chantecker" are the best papers—
you can get 5 large hooks of either
brand—free for only one complete set
of Poker Hands, from your nearest
Poker Hand Premium Store or by mail;
YOU WIN 3 WAY
Better Cigarettes
More Cigarettes
• Poker Hands, too
with TURRET FINE CUT
. .
Follow the lead of a host of other wise smokers—
"roll your own" with Turret Fine Cut—and let your
money buy more and better tobacco. You'll get
Poker Hands, too --which you can exchange free
for the best cigarette papers—"Vogue" or "Chante-
cler"--or for other useful gifts. Why smoke any
other Fine Cut when Turret gives you so much more!
It, pays to "Roll Your Own" with
FINE CUT
CIGARETTE TOBACCO
SAVE THE POKER HANDS
Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada, Limited
of your money, take care of your job,
take care of your reputation_
Cut out your foolishness. Eat less,
work harder, save money, pay your
bills, be polite, get to bed earlier.
This is practical advice, the testi-
mony of everyone who has lived long
enough to know the penalty that must
be paid for disobeying the accepted
rules.
Nolle—How did you get out of ad-
mitting that your father was electro-
cuted?
Prosse-1 said he occupied the chair
of applied electricity at one of our
public lsiistitutions.
Nurse—You are slow! Loolc how
quickly Dorothy gets undressed? •
Barbara—Yes, but she's practicing
to be a film star. ..
•
Make a business and make money,
but do not neglect the making of
friends, too, because their memory of
you is all that will live, when you
are gone.
Jazz—This kind of weather :0111W
me to the bone.
Telltale Marks
Trap the Criminal
Fingerprint Operations of
Doubtful Value Now
Much speculation has followed the
recent statement that criminals were
having the skin of their finger tips
altered in order to prevent identifi-
cation by the finger -print method,
writes John W. Harrington in the N.
Y. Times. The natural pattern of
the prints, it is reported, is being re-
moved with the aid of skin -grafting
operations. Lately several criminals
'have been arrested from whose fing-
ers only smudges without definite pat-
tern. could be obtained.
If this practice were successful, it
is said, the effectiveness of the fin-
ger -printing method would be serious-
ly impaired. This method has here-
tofore been regarded as infallible and
an elaborate system of identification
has been built up on it.
Other Ways of Identification.
Razz—Try wearing a warm Cap. —se , k1 Win: if thealteration were attemp-
Be Kind
Be kind to the oid man, while strong
in thy youth—
Be kind, not in seeming alone, but in
truth
He once was as young and as hopeful
as thou,
With..a bosom as light, as unwrinkled
a brow!
Be kind to the poor man and give
of thy bread,
With shelter and pillow to comfort
his head;
His lot and thine own may be ane
ere he dieth,
Or neighbour to thine the low grave
where he lieth!
Be kind to the crooked, the lame
and the blind;
What's lacked in the body they feel
in the mind;
And while virtue through trial and
pain cometh forth,
In the mind, not the body, in men's
truest worth.
Be kind to the fallen who lives but
to mourn;
Be kind to the outcast who seeks to
return;
Be kind to the hardened who never
hath prayed;
Be kind to the timid- who still is
afraid.
The injured who down by oppression
is borne;
The slighted who withers; the victim
of scorn;
The flattered who topples aloft but to
fail;
The wronger and wronged -- ab, be
kindly to all!
Poi' vast is the world of the generous
mind,
And narrow the sphere to the selfish
assigned;
And clear is the path of the warm
and the true-'••
Of the haughty and vain, how delu-
sive the view.
Then thuto theold show respect what
thou mayest—
The poor, while to Him, who •gives all
things thou prayest---
The weak or the lost, 'nea.tb the load
• of his sorrow—
And thine own cup of joy shall o'er -
flow ere the morrow.
Wireless stations to serve India's
600,000 villages are the basis of a new
radio scheme. Each village will have
a eonmuinal receiving set, towards
the eost and upkeep at which the in-
habitants will each pay a email fee.
In
constructing the Panama Canal,
about 360,000,000 tons of rock and
earth Were removed.
tea to any extent, as some experts
doubt, other excellent methods of iden-
tification exist. The finger impres-
sions are widely used because they
can be made quickly and conveniently.
The palms of the hands and the soles
of the feet, however, could also serve.
The balls of the toes have as distinc-
tive patterns as have the tips of the
fingers.
The' palms aucl soles of human be-
ings, and some animals, such as
monkeys, are covered with friction
ridges. The researches of Sir Fran-
cis Galton, a pioneer in linger -print-
ing, showed how varied are the out•
lines formed by these ridges.
In different individuals they are
shaped into ends, forks and small sec-
tions called islands. If a very small
area of skin on a palm or sole be
closely examined, even with the un-
aided eye, this wide variety of ar-
rangement is detected. With the mic-
roscope, the details become more
sharply 'defined.
The sole -printing system has been
used on newly born babies in ma-
ternity hospitals for years, both for
records and to prevent the possibil-
ity of mixing the infants. It is dif-
ficult to get impressions from the
fingers at birth; the patterns at the
tips are not set fully enough. The
same is true of the toes. Impres-
sions from the balls of the feet of
the Very young, however, are quickly
made and are large enough to be
examined easily, They have been ac-
cepted as conclusive evidence when
questions as to the identity of infants
have arisen.
Sole prints for adults require more
care in the taking than the finger
prints. The subject sits in a chair
while his feet are linked and pressed
gently against the prepared paper. If
he stood up the weight of his body
would run the details of the friction
ridges together and obscure the de-
sign.
Sole piuts are
ways superior to
considered in some
fingerprints, as for
eae
€'
ti
fee
COLDS ARE
DANGEROUS
Soothe and relieve
them; build up
resistance with
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
?eY 19-33
r521CH IN VITASNMINr
%.,.sane a ,ry_ e a.iaevee
the identification of persons killed in
accidents or in war where the bodies
may be mutilated. The feet, being en-
cased in shoes, are much better pro-
tected than the hands and may give
a clearer impression.
On the palms of the hands are also
various lines which serve to confirm
identification aside from the differ-
ences in the friction ridges. At the
bases of the fingers, for example, are
certain forked marks known as the
digital deltas. Palmists and fortune-
tellers have long professed to read
character and even the future from
the lines.
Individual' skins differ widely. Al.
though the differences are not
enough to furnish definite 4dentifi-
cations, they niay furnish corrobo-
ration. The differences' are in texture,
the nature of the sweat pores, the
pigmentation and especially in the
direction of the hair lines. The last,
though hardly visible, show varying
peculiarities then closely studied. In
the Bertillion system of identification,
for instance, the natural pattern or
arrangement of the hair of the head,
if any, is a factor.
Bodily Measurement,.
The Bertillon system of measure-
ments has many points which are still
of value. Its founder, Alphonse Ber-
tillon, was a pioneer in the applica-
tion of scientific anthropology in the
identification of criminals. The meas-
urements are taken of the bones or
other parts of the anatomy which do
not change in the adult. A man may
grow fat or lean, grow a beard or
shave clean, or even have his features
altered by surgery, as some gangsters
are said to have done, but he cannot
change the dimensions of his skull
or the width of his cheek bones. The
Bertillon system takes account of this
and similar facts.
The earlier means of identification
may seem old-fashioned in the light of
modern science, but many of them
are still useful. There is a barbaric
instinct in many criminals which
causes them to have themselves tat-
tooed.
Although tatoo marks can be eradi-
cated, or almost so, or altered by
working other patterns over them, it
is surprising how many habitual crim-
inals neglect so obvious a point, -
Again, the state of the teeth, especial-
ly gold fillings in front—of which
many malefactors are proud ---often
lead to • their arrests.
That's Curious
100,000 beasts, including sheep,
lambs, calves, goats, pigs and croco-
diles, provided leather covers for
diaries last year.
Twins occur ti. ecu tunes in every
thousand births, triplets 160 times in
a million births, while quadruplets are
twenty tines ra c than triplets.
3,434,026 tons of coal are utilized
every year to blow train whistles,
Oysters start life as females, emerge
into males and, after ,bout two years,
return to their original sex.
422,000 worth of edible seaweed
was exported last year from the Irish
Free State, chiefly to America. Known
as Carrageen Moss, it makes an ex-
cellent substitute for the yolk of eggs.
Bees hold conversations, according
to a Newcastle apiarist, by throwing
off little particles of dust '.from their
wings, thus utilizing a novel form of
broadcasting.
A new high-speed film camera takes
2,000 pictures a second (7,200,000 an
hour), on top of .which it automatical-
ly records the time. At this rate a
splinter from a cracked electric bulb
is seen falling like a snowflake, while
the effect of a flashlight resembles a
slowly darkening stage, '
r4
"Some of the realism that goes in-
to matters loss clouded by theory and
tradition needs to be applied to the
administration Of justice. ;"�rankl]n
D. Roosevelt.
"I"ronh a competitive standpoint, I
do not think professional tennis is
interesting."-- llelen Wills Woody.
Classified Advertising
PATENTS,
s N OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR.
List of wanted inventions and full
information sent free. The Ramsay Com-
pany, World Patent Attorneys, 273 Bank
Street, Ottawa, Canada.
Tested Eczema Remedy
Is Prescription of Doctor
Your skin trouble—whether it is ec-
zema, acne, hives, dandruff, ringworm
infection or pimples and blotches—will
be positively benefitted by D.D.D:,
bemuse D.D.D. is a tried and tested
Physician's Prescription: D.D.D. was
developed originally for his own pa-
tients by Dr. D. D. Dennis. It is now
manufactured by the makers of"Cam-
ppana's Italian Balm. In 35 years
1).D.D. has brought clear, healthful
skins to millions. At druggists. Trial wise
e. Guaranteed to give instant relief or money
c::.:i e•�. 4
A Troublesome Cow
A cow, its ownership lost in musty
records, is the cause of the largest
personal file of correspondence on
Parliament. Hill. Its death led to
thousands of letters. Many years ago,
in Manitoba, a cow was killed by
August Swanson, a Swedish immi-
grant. Lawsuits followed and when
Swanson's farm was ordered seized
Swanson wrote his first letter to Ot-
tawa. A few days later Ottawa re-
plied. Swanson wrote again. Ottawa
answered. Swanson replied—in fact,
he wrote every day for weeks. Fif-
teen
ieteen years later the Swanson file of
letters and replies weighed several
hundred pounds. And 25 years after
the now was killed the file would fill
a truck. The man's suicide put an end
to the correspondence, but to this day
Ottawa has retained every one of his
letters. Why, no one seems• to knew.
A large warehouse in downtown Ot-
tawa is the ultimate repository for
every letter written to a Government
department and the reply. Old and
creaky cabinets contain millions of
replies. Ottawa does not destroy let-
ters or records without due thought.
In. the dusty old warehouse are thous-
ands of letters ante -dating Confedera-
tion.-- Amherstburg Echo.
"People change their minds, where
they have any, and where they haven't
they change them more frequently."—
Clarence Darrow.
YOUR LIVER'S MAKING
YOU FEEL OUT OF SORTS
Wattle up your Liver Bile
---No Calomel needed
When you feel blue, depressed, sour on the
world that's your liver which isn't pouring its
daily two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels.
Digestion and elimination aro being slowed
up, food is aeoumulating and decaying inside
you and making you feel wretched.
Mere bowel -movers like salts, oil, mineral
water, laxative candy or :hawing gum, or
roughage, don't go far enough.
You need a liver stimulant. Carter's Little
Liver Pills is the best one. Safe. Purely vege-
table. Sure. Ask for them by name. Refuse
substitutes. 25c, at all druggists. 52
ror all the skin
C>uitiicurtil troubles of child-
tieu Ointment' hood. Wise mothers
should always keep
it on hand:
Price 25e. and 50c.
QUIVERING
NERVES
Yield to Lydia E. Pinkhattea
Vegetable Compound
When you are just on edge , .
when you can't stand the chili
Area's noise ... when everything
is a burden when you are irri-
table and blue... try this medi-
cine. 98 out of 100 women report
benefit.
It will give yciu just the extra
energy you need. I..ife will seem.
Worth living again.
TcSUE No. 7--'34